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AN OWL WATCHING OVER US

I caught this OWL flying between the trees behind my home. The lighting was not the best from this angle but it was a sight to be seen. I just went back out to see if it was still there and it is in the split of a large tree eating on something. This is a beautiful Bird.









Found this scale Pepsi 1954 Chevy Panel Van while cleaning the yard. Aren't these things collectors items?




Copyright 2009 by Larry Sinclair/larrysinclair.org/larrysinclair-0926.blogspot.com/LarrySinclair0926.com and Larry SinclairBarackObama.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.










AN OWL WATCHING OVER US

[Source: Good Times Society]


AN OWL WATCHING OVER US

[Source: News Station]

posted by 71353 @ 11:40 PM, ,

Last Week's 5 Greatest Hits at Reason.com

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Here are the top five most popular articles that ran at Reason.com from May 24-31. Read 'em once again or for the first time.


Sonia Sotomayor on Gun Rights and Racial Preferences: Why libertarians-and everyone who believes in limited government-should worry about Barack Obama's Supreme Court nominee Damon W. Root (5/26)


California's Silent Big Spenders: Political class refuses to explain why the state requires hysterical spending growth Matt Welch (5/28)


Is the Abortion Debate Changing?: Understanding the latest opinion poll results David Harsanyi (5/27)


Nostalgianomics: Liberal economists pine for days no liberal should want to revisit. Brink Lindsey (5/26)


What Norm Coleman & Al Franken Have Taught America: The Senate is carrying more dead weight than an Uruguayan rugby team Nick Gillespie (5/29)












Last Week's 5 Greatest Hits at Reason.com

[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]


Last Week's 5 Greatest Hits at Reason.com

[Source: Wb News]


Last Week's 5 Greatest Hits at Reason.com

[Source: Boston News]


Last Week's 5 Greatest Hits at Reason.com

[Source: News Article]


Last Week's 5 Greatest Hits at Reason.com

[Source: News Headlines]

posted by 71353 @ 10:37 PM, ,

Primetime Emmys Moved Up a Week

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Emmy Award

The TV gold rush will start earlier this year. The 61st Primetime Emmy Awards has been rescheduled to Sunday, Sept. 13, a week earlier than the original date, CBS announced.

The move was made to accommodate ...



Read More >




Primetime Emmys Moved Up a Week

[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]


Primetime Emmys Moved Up a Week

[Source: News Headlines]


Primetime Emmys Moved Up a Week

[Source: Wb News]


Primetime Emmys Moved Up a Week

[Source: Abc 7 News]

posted by 71353 @ 10:10 PM, ,

Will the Killing of George Tiller Have an Effect on Public Opinion Regarding Abortion?

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Just last week, Denver Post and Reason.com columnist David Harsanyi asked, "Is The Abortion Debate Changing?" Based on a recent Gallup Poll, which found that a majority of Americans considered themselves "pro-life" for the first time since the question started being asked in 1995, Harsanyi suggested "that Americans are getting past the politics and into the morality of the issue" after decades of legalized abortion. And, he argued, the morality of abortion is a lot more complicated than most pro- or anti-abortion slogans let on.


Earlier today, in response to killing of Kansas abortion doctor George Tiller, Jacob Sullum asked why anti-abortion activists rushed to condemn the death of a man who by their own accounts was slaughtering innocents. Jacob understands why the activists might say that, but argues that it's really a tactical response: That they need to distance themselves from murderous extremists.


So what do Reason readers think? Will the killing of George Tiller push more Americans to identify as pro-life? Or will it push voters in the other direction? Does it matter that Tiller was known for doing late-term abortions, which are statistically rare but gruesome?


You go back to that Gallup Poll and one thing sticks out on the basic question of whether abortion should be legal under some circumstances: Since 1976, the percentage answering yes has been around 50 percent or higher (there are a few years where it dipped into the high 40s). That is, it's been pretty stable at or around a majority number.


And the percentage of people saying abortion should be illegal under all circumstances has rarely cracked the 20 percent figure (though it has again in recent years). Similarly, the percentage saying abortion should be legal under all circumstances, which peaked at 34 percent in the early 1990s, has always been a minority position (which currently stands at 22 percent and has been dropping lately).


I suspect that as abortion becomes rarer (as Reason's Ron Bailey pointed out in 2006, abortion has been getting rarer since the 1990s and also occurs earlier in pregnancies than before), it's quite possible that the either/or positions might change, but that their movement will have little effect on the middle position of abortion staying legal under some circumstances. Even those, such as Harsanyi, who is plainly troubled by the logic of abortion, generally concede that prohibition would cause more problems than it would fix ("I also believe a government ban on abortion would only criminalize the procedure and do little to mitigate the number of abortions.").


Back in 2003, on the occasion of Roe v. Wade's 30th anniversary, I argued that regarding abortion the country had reached a consensus that


has little to do with morality per se, much less with enforcing a single standard of morality. It's about a workable, pragmatic compromise that allows people to live their lives on their own terms and peaceably argue for their point of view....


This isn't to say that the debate about abortion is "over"-or that laws governing the specifics of abortion won't continue to change over time in ways that bother ardent pro-lifers and pro-choicers alike. But taking a longer view, it does seem as if the extremes of the abortion debate - extremes that included incendiary language (including calls for the murder of abortion providers) - have largely subsided in the wake of a widely accepted consensus. Part of this is surely due to the massive increases in reproduction technologies that allow women far more control over all aspects of their bodies (even as some of those technologies challenge conventional definitions of human life).



That isn't an outcome that is particularly satisfying to activists on either side of the issue or to people who want something approaching rational analysis in public policy. But it's still where we're at and it's unlikely the Tiller case will do much to move things one way or the other. The one thing that would likely change it would be if there was a massive shift toward later-term abortions, which seems unlikely based on long-term trendlines and technological innovations.


 











Will the Killing of George Tiller Have an Effect on Public Opinion Regarding Abortion?

[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]


Will the Killing of George Tiller Have an Effect on Public Opinion Regarding Abortion?

[Source: Media News]


Will the Killing of George Tiller Have an Effect on Public Opinion Regarding Abortion?

[Source: State News]


Will the Killing of George Tiller Have an Effect on Public Opinion Regarding Abortion?

[Source: Murder News]


Will the Killing of George Tiller Have an Effect on Public Opinion Regarding Abortion?

[Source: News Article]

posted by 71353 @ 10:05 PM, ,

Shuffleboard in Puducherry

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Steve Herzfeld managed an admirably inventive end-run around high healthcare costs for his Parkinson's- and Alzheimer's-afflicted parents. After in-home care was no longer possible, he priced American nursing homes, but found that the cheapest acceptable option was still $6,000. So he sent them to India. Quality elderly care in Puducherry cost less than his father's fixed income. According to the Guardian:

[In India, Herzfeld] could give his parents a much higher standard of care than would have been possible in the US for his father's income of $2,000 (£1,200) a month. In India that paid for their rent, a team of carers—a cook, a valet for his father, nurses to be with his mother 12 hours a day, six days a week, a physiotherapist and a masseuse—and drugs (costing a fifth of US prices), and also allowed them to put some money away...."In India, they really like older people," says Herzfeld, describing how the staff seemed to regard his parents as their own family.

Of course, the care was inexpensive because a couple thousand bucks goes further in Puducherry than it might in, say, Fort Lauderdale. Herzfeld, though, apparently believes that it was cheap because elderly care in America is greedily overpriced by providers. He vents about about healthcare and the profit motive: 

[Herzfeld] believes that India could teach the US and UK a lot about care of the elderly. "In America, healthcare is done for profit, so that skews the whole thing and makes it very inhuman in its values," he says.

I try not to begrudge a man his fantasies, but the idea that the nurses, valets, and masseuses of Puducherry were doing it all out of the goodness of their hearts—rather than the goodness of their paychecks—is condescending. It was simple outsourcing, not subcontinental altruism, that saved Steve Herzfeld so much money.

In Reason's May 2009 print edition, Ronald Bailey wrote about the outsourcing of hip replacement.









Shuffleboard in Puducherry

[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]


Shuffleboard in Puducherry

[Source: Wb News]


Shuffleboard in Puducherry

[Source: Mexico News]


Shuffleboard in Puducherry

[Source: Nascar News]

posted by 71353 @ 8:34 PM, ,

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